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The Review Carries the Only Full Leased Associated Press Wire RfThe Warren DistrictTHE WEATHERARIZONA: Wednesday fairsouth, showers noith portion,-cooler; Thursday fair,cooler east, portion.COPPER PRICESEngineering & Mining JournalQuotationsThe averace price of copper. for the week ending: October6th, 1920 17.5S7Average prlre of copper forthe month of Sopt. 1R.144Vol. 24. No. 245BISBEE, ARIZONA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1920Price Five Centsu.41M 1Wt! $fkrn3i1-5l1HORIZONi? i533i-1.131iiCharge FederalIMPLICATEBIG CHIEFOF PORT OFN.Y. IN DEALpHICAGO, Oct. 12. Govern-ment investigatoin of the activities of a rina of whisky dealersoperating or a national scale . hasben begun as ire result of confessions obtained frcm severalChicago' saloonkeepers, it wasdeclared by federal agents today.The confessions are said to haveimplicated officials of several tftat tiling companies and politicians in various parts of the countrv ntrl to liavorevealed plans to make Chicago thecenter of their proposed scheme.Stock Broker rnvolvedAccording to federal officers, H. A.Sadler, a former New York stockbroker. Is said to have declared thath paid $45,000 to a Chicago politician who had been employed in theoffice -of Collector Mager, to secureInfluence In the issuance of forgedpermits under which whiskey runningin . Chicago had been carried ouL TheIndictment of at least a -score of persons on charges of conspiracy to violate the prohibition amendment willbe asked this week of the federalprand jury, it was stated at the federal building. To this grand jury, itwas said, will be presented names ofwholesale whisky dealers,, numerousfederal employes as well as go-betweens,politicians and others. .Netted, onsiderablt CashThe Information placed at the disposal of the federal authorities bySadler is said to have disclosed thatthe bootlegging already carried on inChicago by the whisky ring has beenso extensive as to have netted thoseengaged in the operation close to$1,000,000.It was also disclosed, it was said,that those engaged in the traffic hadnot found It necessary to forge permits for the removal of liquor buthad been able to obtain bona fide onesand also later to remove all incriminating records from the offices ofthe prohibition officials through thecorruption of oficials entrusted withthe task of suppressing the sal ofliquor.Name Woman as PawnOne woman employed in one of thegovernment offices in Washingtonwas said to have been named as apawn in the hands of the whiskoy"ring."The disclosures regarding theChicago operations of the ring aresaid to have resulted from the -e!z-urehere on August 24 of a shipmentof 1000 cases of whisky of a 1200 caseshipment addressed to 1 A Sadler,In care of the American Distilling(CONTINUED ON PA(JE TWO)Last MinuteBIG BLAZE CONSUMES TEXAS COTTON GIN .WACO, Texas, Oct. 12. Th. Gibson cottofi gin at Branchville, wasdestroyed by fire Monday night, according to reports received today.The loss was estimated at $12,00p.23 PERSONS HURT AS GRAND STAND COLLAPSESJERSEY CITY, N. J Oct. 12. Sixteen persons were injured, sevenseriously, when an improvised grandstand collapsed during the progressof the Carpentier-Levinsky fight here tonight.NIGHT RIDERS THREATEN VIOLENCE IN SOUTHNASHVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 1?. Several additional cotton gins inMorgan county, Alabama, are reported to have closed after receivingwarnings from night riders, according to the Albany, Alabama, cor-r-spordentof The Banner.TEXJkNS KILL MORE THAN 12.000 RATSCORPUS CHRISTI, Texas-, Oct. 12. ..lore than 12,000 rats have beenkilled .here to date at an average cost of five cents per rat. Not a traceof bubonic plague hat been found among those examined.WHAT WE NEEDEmployees With Forging Numerous PermitsFRENCH CABINET TAKESSTEPS TO CURTAIL THEHIGH COST OF LIVINGPARIS, Oct. 12. The cabinet tc'ay adopted a program to reducehe high cost of living in Fiance.Uepartmental councils of consumers are to be established with'ai entral council jn Paris.The use of fish is to be encourtiffed and many fish markets willbe opened, while the exportationof dairy products f.nd cheese will') prohibited. ' The importation of"ni'tn meats has increased, and'he system of distribution hasbeen improved.A stricter enforcement of foodlaws and suppression of profiteering is promised by the cabinet andnew regulations will be drafted to"ontrol the slaughter and sale ofbeef in an effort -to check the rapi'ily rising prices.Incapacity of MexicanJudge Nullifies Trialof Sheppard's Slayer jiPedro Mesa, the Mexican who is !iheld at Xaco charged with ins murder of Constable A. E. Sheppard ofBisbee, is to be given another hearing at Naco," his first hearing htv-lng been declared of no effect be-1cause or the alleged drunkenness ofthe presiding judge. The judge, whopresided at the hearing, has beendischarged for misconduct. A judgewill be sent from Cananea to preside at the second hearing or thecase, which will be held sometimethis week. It will be necessary forthe police department to. have all Itswitnesses in the Mexican court asecond time. The purpose; of ; thebearing is to determine if there 1ssufficient grounds for turning Mesaover to the United States courts fortrial.Vanks Hold Mass forLord Mayor MacSwineyNEW CORK, Oct. 12. The sixtyfirst fast day of Terence MacSwineylord mayor of Cork, was markedhere with a solemn military mass inthe church of Sr. Francis de 1 Sallesattended by members of New York'sfamous Irish regiment, "The Fighting Sixty Ninth." The ReverendJames A. Dunnigan. regimental chaplain, officiated. lie referred toMacSwiney as one of Ireland's greatest heroes" and "a man of God, defy ng the forces of hell."Big Fire Turns Out500 Negro FamiliesPINE BLUFF. Ark.. Oct. 12.Nearly five hundred negroes werehomeless tonight as the result of afire this afternoon which swept' overeight blccks of the , negro residencedistrict and for a time threatenedthe business district less . than amile away. Only the dying out ofa brisk southeast wind and entrenchment tactics employed bv firemen, checked the flames. Nearly100 homes were destroyed and thetotal loss was estimated at from$200,000 to $300,000.Bimini, the small West Indian islandofl the Florida coast, was thought bythe early Spaniards to contain the mythical fountain of youth.Wire JoltsIS A LAW REQUIRING THE LABEL ON THE CIGAR TOMONARCH'S LIFE HANGING INBALANCE; VICTIM OF MONKEYl(Associated Frets L.ene& Wire)ATHENS, Greece, Oct. 12.Only the strong constitution ofKing Alexander of Greece is relied upon by his physicians tobrine him. through the crisis ofhis illness, resulting from ' thebite of a monkey a short timefigti. It was admitted at the palace today that the king hail entered into the critical phase ofhis illness. 'The government, alarmed atthe serious turn ' In the king'scondition, discussed the question of a regency and decidedAviator Burns toAs Plane TurnsgAN ANTONIO, Texas, Oct. 12. Sergeant Charles D.Allen of Mason., Mich., was burned to dejath and StaffSergeant Walter French, Battle Creek, Mich., was seriously injured today when an airplane piloted by Frencfistruck a building at New Braunfels, near here, and burstinto flames. The men belonged to the 147th Aerosquadron, Kelly field, San Antonio, and. were engagedin a training flight.BOURKE COGKRAN BUMFS STATEMENTOF SOLON -HARDING FOR RENEWAL, OF .WAR OF EXTERMINATION IN IRELANDVJEW YORK. Oct. 12 The state-' ment of Senator Hard, ng thatIf elected he would -not tr.ka officialcognizance of conditions of IrelandIs responsible for the "renewal ofthe war of extermination now beingwaged under the orders of LJoydGeorge." W. Botirke Coekran, ofNew York, declared In a telegramfrom Cleveland, received at Democratic national headquarters today.Mr. - Ccckran's statement said:"I find it difficult to believe thatany man of Irish blood could support for the presidency a man who,the moment he believed his electionwas made certain by the result InMoine, hastened to assure the Brit$1 Fine Brings "Rube" ;Marquard's Discharge;. Big Leaguer Loses Out(Associated Prtss Leased WirtlCLEVELAND, Oct. 12. President Charles Ebbeta of theBrooklyn National League clubtonight said" that "Rube" 'Mar- "quard, pitcher, who was (finedone dollar and costs today forviolating the exhibition ticketordinance, would never play withwith Brooklyn again."I rm through with him absolutely 4id Mif. Ebbtt. "Hehasn't been released, however,and if anyone else -wants himthey can have him. But Marqua rd will never again put on aBrooklyn uniform."SOLDIERS SLAY MAJOR' DURING BIG RAIDINGPARTY IN IRISH CITYDUBLIN, Oct. 12. Major GeorgeSmyth, brother of CommissionerSmyth of (he Irish constabulary, whowas assassinated in a club house inCork, where he was sftting withfriends last summer, was "kiTTed lastnight during military raids 7n ffrumcondra. County ITeath. The killing occurred while the ruihenry was ?.r(7gthe home of Professor Carrolan of AllHallowces college.Major Smyth long had been in theBritish army and had been decorated with the Distinguished Service Order and the Military 'Cross. At thetime of the assassination of his brother Tie -ps serving In T!gypt, but shortly afterward? returned to Ireland, andhad been serving in Dublin for a shorttime.that the council of . ministerswould take up iJhe task of administering the country in the eventof the kipg's condition becoming. worse. ! iYesterday, it was said at thepalace that there! had been littlechange in the condition of. Alexander over that it Sunday. "Hisphysicians at that time .refrained from giving f any . concisestatement, although there- was,was no attempt jte conceal the.Tact that the illness of the monarch-was grave. -Death iti MidairFlaming Massish government that no matter whatbarbarities it might perpetuate InIreland no word of official condemnation would be issued by his government against It."The degree of murder and pillageincreased alter Mr. Harding's statement, shows that . after it was published condemnation by this government had been exercising someslight measure of restraint on thebloodthirstiness of British officialsin Ireland."Mr. Lloyd George, confrontedwith the alternative of emancipating or exterminating the Irish people, is now backed y Mr. Harding'sassurance of official indifference toproclaim a policy of extermination."Pilot of Mail AirplaneRuns Into Big Snowstorm,and Is Forced to Earth(A undated Prts Leased Wtrt 'SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 12.Encountering a snowstorm in"western Wyoming, Pilot Pickup,-.! who left Cheyenne with a mart.-,airplane for Salt Lake at day-,break, was forced to' land at'Rock Springs, Wyo., this afternoon, according to word received herev Pilot Pickup wasscheduled to have come to SaltLake and return ;to Cheyennebefore night. He arrived - atRock Springs on time but shortly after leaving there ran intothe storm and returned.OFFICER HURLS NEGROFROM ROOF IN ORDERTO PROTECT HIMSELFNEW YORK. Oct. 12. PatrolmanMartin Gill today struggled for 20 minutes on the roof of a five story building with a San Domino negro he" wastrying to arrest and then shot his antagonist to save himself from beinghurled into the streH.The negro with a bullet in his stomach, slid off the roof, falling tnto abasket of wash left on the side walk.There he died a few minutes later.Scores of pedestrians stood on Sixthavenue, transfixed, watching the struggle while guests in several nearby hotels pressed their fares to windowpanes. Finally a former sailor dished upstairs to the roof and enui;ht Gillby one leu just as tho negro wasabout to roll him into the street.For "Whiskey Ring" Which Netted $1,000,000DEATH'S A FICKLE LOVERI ON DON, Oct. 12. Death is a fickle lover. One courts death and gazes" with favor upon his dark iace. Death stretches out his arms andpromises forgetfulness. One takes a step toward him and he turns andslips away and jealous Life is vicious with its punishment.. There was the case of Maud Jeffrey but that's the story''It started when a inau told a lie.Maud, 24, a woman proud of the stiff respectability of English middleclassers, believed Isaac Duffy when he said he'd marry her sometime andthat then "it would be all right."; DUFFY ALREADY HAD A WIFEDuffy couldn't marry her. He had a wife and it could d never be"all right." . t .. . ;Duffy could nt mairy her. He had a wile and it could never bedren. Duffy's wife found 'but. In a rase of jealousy she sought out Maudand mauled and pummeled her, scratched her eyes and pulled her hairand tried to hurt Maud's baby.Maud fled, to her brother-in-law's home. He told her she and thebaby might spend the night in his sitting room.MAUD WAS "TIRED OF IT ALL""I was tired of it all and there didn't seem u chance to be happy,"says Maud. "I thought it would be better to die and take the baby withme to the Other Side."She dropped her last three coppers in a penny gas meter, drew thegas stove to her and laid it between the baby and herself.In the morning the child was dead and Maud was nearly dead.They tried her for murder at Old Bailey. Duffy is gone and can'tbe found. The other baby, a boy. whimpered by his mother's side in theprisoners dock.JURORS FINDS HER GUILTYMaud, dishonered and ashamed, told her Mary and" told how nowshe wants to live for the other baby's sake."He needs me," she said, "and I want to live,"The jury found her guilty and the black-capped judge read the deathwarrant to her.There's a chance that the higher courts will grant her freedom.Anyway, that's the way it goej when one courts Death.GDXPICTURESLAFAYETTE, Intl., Oct. 12. Governor Cox of Ohio In a busy tour today of Illinois and Indiana, hammered heavily upon the league of nations pronouncements . of himselfand Senator Harding, picturing hisRepublican opponent as "wigglingand wobbling." The Democraticcandidate 'emphasized, to 16 audiences, that he was .for" the leaguewith "whole heart and soul."Centering his assault upon Senator Harding's league statement. Governor Cox declared it "vacillating,"the eleventh posJUon assun(id : bySenator Harding and at the heelsof a "tempest" aroused by Mr. Hard'ing's Des 'Moines speech. That thesenator's proposal for a. new .-associationcf nations was held -.by. former .President " Taft to be impractl(COXTINUED ON VACiB FOUR)Mesa Extends WarmMESA, Ariz., Oct. 12. National issues, including the peacetreaty and the te?.gue of nationsand matters of state interestwere to be discussed by SenatorMarcus A. Smith and membersof the Democratic state ticketin addresses here tonight. SenW. U. Telegraph Co.PHOENIX, Oct. .12. Arguments by representatives o' theWestern Union Telegraph company for an increase o' 20 percent H intrastate' r3ts; werehe.ird by the Arizona corporaSEN. HARDINGAS 'WOBBLING'SWITCH EXPLODES OIL; TWO MEN DIE OF BURNS. GLOBE, Oct. 12. Lewis Allen,aged 22, and Leroy Spurling, aged28, died this morning ?.t eight o'clockat a local hospital as a result ofburns received at the Roosevelt pow-I er house near here. The men werej employed at the plant at tender andoperator and when they made an eft fort last night to turn on an oilswitch an explosion followed saturating their clothes and bodies withoil which immediately ignited by aspark from the switch. The skin andTELL' US THE PERCENTAGE OF CABBAGE IT CONTAINSG.O.P. NOMINEENVADES SOLIDTON BOARD SENATOR HARDING'SSPECIAL TRAIN, Ocl. 12. Beginning what may be his last speakingtour outside Ohio, Senator Hardingjourneyed southward tonight Tor ariinvasion of territory which has beencounted Democratic for half a century.Opening with a speech, tomorrownight at Chattanooga, Tenn., he willswing northwest on the following dayto Louisville, Ky., through a sectionbelonging normally to the solid south.Many stops are to be made for rearplatform speeches and the nominee announced tonight that he was preparedto make a vigorous and aggressivefight to swing the two states over tothe Republican column.Withheld Final Decision. Meantime the candidate and his(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)Welcome to Sen. Smithator Smith, In arguing for theleague of jiatlofis covenant inan address last night at Prescott, was repeatedly greetedwith applause. The party wasto leave Phoenix early tomorrowfor Tucson., : . , fWants to Raise Ratestion commission today Prominent t'fici.ils of the enr-'p-tnywere present. The com-ri-j-ioriwithheld issuance of ti orderpending further consideration.flesh of both men were burned to acrispt They were given first aidat Roosevelt and rushed to Globeand placed in a hospital. Spurlingwas unconscious and both died aboutfour hours after arriving here.Allen's parents and relatives livein Phoen:x. They arrived here latethis afternoon. The parents andrelatives of Spurling with the exception of a brother at Roosevelt,live at Seymour, Indiana.Advices from industries in thisSOUTH ONTERRORISEPREDICTEDWITH FALLOF SOVIETlyASHINGTON, Oct. 12. Signs"of the approaching collapse ofBolshevism in Russia are seenby state department officials inthe crumbling of soviet authority on the' Polish front and therapidly augmenting strength ofthe anV-Bolshevik forces Insoutheastern Europe under General Wrangel.Already consideration is );.given at the department, it wn - sr " 1today, to what may follow t1 idof soviet rule in Russia.The prospect of anarchy :.nd cba-i os in the event of soviet di. solution;s very real, according to officials,but the belief was expressed that thelonal Zemstvos have been so wellorganized as to maintain a semblanceof order and some cohesion of econ-.omic life until a stable governmentcapable of obtaining the al -ren eof the majority of the Russian people shall arise.Driven From PersiaThe situation in Persia, where fora time Bolshevism threatened todisrupt the country. recently hascleared, according to reports received by the department.The league of Bolsflevism with theTurkish nationalists also is regarded as having been weakened with therout of Mustapha Kemal and his followers. Most significant cf the wane ofsoviet influence in Russia, according to officials, was the rejection ofBolshe1ki overtures by Switzerlandwhich is situated so ns to he able toform an accurate opinion of the character and future of the sriet regime. It i-( now also known thttsomewhat earlier Rumania rejectedovertures of the soviet governmentit was paid.Attitude of DistrustThe judgment of socialists unonthe soviet government was expectedto be registered with emphasis atthe meeting of the German si -.-laliMat ! lie where the risht wing of thGerman socialist party Is expectedto withdraw from the convention onthe issue of adherence to the Moscow third Internationale. The right .wing includes the great majority ofsocialists in Germany and may beconsidered in the cpirllon of officials, as representative of the growing attitude of distrust of socialistsgenerally in Euroie toward Bolshevism. ARMISTICE IS SIGNEDRIGA. Oct. 12. A preliminarypeace treaty and armistice was signedby the Polish and Russian soviet peacdelegates here at 7:10 o'akick tonUht.The armistice pctually becomes effective at midnight Oct. IS.The announcement that pence wasto be sinned brought great crowds tothe square surrounding the Blackheadhouse. M. Jorfe and the Bol.-h vikdelegation entered the hall Itrst andwere followed by M. Dombinskl andthe Polish delegation. About 2iH pt-r-(CO.VTIN'UKDON PAJR ' OI'IOvicinity which use power fromRoosevelt, have been forced to usetheir auxiliary plants. Many industries and public utilities in the SaltRiver valley and Phoenix are fe; elto be without power as the re .'t .the Roosevelt plant being c- J.Failure to make telephonic c mictions make It Impossible to get further details although reports thatthe plant has beer, damafed ta theextent of about $70,000 sjem to beauthentic.n